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Kashmir leader opts to shiver with the masses
by Staff Writers
Srinagar, India (AFP) Jan 9, 2012


The chief minister of Indian Kashmir has ordered power to be cut to VIPs in the region after blackouts left locals shivering amid snow storms and sub-zero temperatures, officials said.

Omar Abdullah ordered officials from the power department to snap electricity supplies to his high-security residence in the main city of Srinagar and other homes in the exclusive Gupkar Road area.

The power will remain off "until the supply to the entire (Kashmir) valley is restored," a statement from the state government said in Srinagar after heavy weekend snow falls toppled power transmission poles and lines.

Abdullah's administration has faced frequent protests over the last 15 days against the power cuts, which were initially the result of disruption caused by temperatures as low as minus 14 degrees Celsius (seven degrees Fahrenheit) at local hydroelectric plants.

Last Monday, security forces antagonised angry locals further by opening fire at a a demonstration near a hydroelectric plant in northern Boniyar village. A student was killed.

"We have been without power and water for the last three days now," Abdul Rashid, 52 from Shopian in southern Kashmir, told AFP.

Rashid, who owns apple orchards, said his family had been keeping warm by burning charcoal.

"We have been melting snow to obtain water for drinking as the taps have frozen in our village," he said, adding that the roads were blocked by thick snow.

The heavy snowfall has left the main highway connecting the Kashmir valley with rest of India closed since Saturday.

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Western Austria cut off after heavy snowfall
Vienna (AFP) Jan 9, 2012 - An entire Austrian region was cut off early Monday after heavy snowfall blocked tunnels and roads and prompted high avalanche alerts.

The western province of Vorarlberg, bordering Switzerland, saw itself cut off entirely from the rest of Austria, with neither road nor rail access possible following four days of snowfall that have piled between two and three metres (6.5-10 feet) of fresh powder on the ground, according to local authorities.

The avalanche risk was rated at level 4 out of 5.

Fallen trees blocked access to the Arlberg tunnel, a key passage from Switzerland to Austria, while several ski resorts such as Lech and Zuers were entirely isolated, they said.

The Arlberg train route was to remain closed on Monday, Austrian Rail said.



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WHITE OUT
Heavy snow in Kashmir closes highway, strands travellers
Srinagar, India (AFP) Jan 8, 2012
Heavy snowfall over the past two days has closed down Indian-administered Kashmir's main highway, stranding hundreds of travellers, officials said Sunday. So far there has been one weather-related fatality in the scenic Himalayan state after a nomad was killed in a snowstorm, police said. The heavy snowfall has also knocked out power and telephone lines and closed major roads, including ... read more


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